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Bisphenol-A induced antioxidants imbalance and cytokines alteration leading to immune suppression during larval development of Labeo rohita

Research Abstract

Recently, the oxidative stress and immunotoxicity biomarkers have been extensively used in embryotoxicity using fish embryos
as promising models especially after exposure to chemical-like environmental estrogens. Bisphenol-A (BPA) is an estrogenic
endocrine disruptor and is ubiquitous in the aquatic environment. Larvae of Labeo rohita were exposed to low concentrations of
BPA(10, 100, 1000 μg/l) for 21 days. Innate immune system, antioxidants parameters, and developmental alterations were used
as biomarkers. Exposure to BPA caused developmental abnormalities including un-inflated swim bladder, delayed yolk sac
absorption, spinal curvature, and edema of pericardium. Lipid peroxidation increased and activity of catalase (p < 0.05), superoxide
dismutase (p < 0.05), and glutathione peroxidase (p < 0.01) decreased after exposure to BPA. Level of reduced glutathione
also decreased (p < 0.05) in BPA-exposed group. Lower expression of tumor necrosis factor-α (p < 0.05) and interferon-γ
(p < 0.001) was observed in BPA-exposed groups while expression of interleukin-10 increased (p < 0.05) in larvae exposed to
10 μg/l BPA. Moreover, exposure of BPA caused a concentration-dependent increase in expression of heat shock protein 70
(p < 0.05). The present study showed that the exposure to BPA in early life stages of Labeo rohita caused oxidative stress and
suppress NF-κB signaling pathway leading to immunosuppression. The results presented here demonstrate the cross talk between
heat shock protein 70 and cytokines expression.

Research Authors
Mehwish Faheem; Muhammad Adeel, Saba Khaliq, Khalid P. Lone & Alaa El-Din-H-Sayed
Research Department
Research Journal
Environmental Science and Pollution Research

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Research Member
Research Pages
1-10
Research Publisher
Springer
Research Rank
1
Research Vol
100
Research Website
https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s11356-020-08959-y#citeas
Research Year
2020